Personally, I like your first solution best, it is simple and easy to maintain. Maybe introduce a helper method for the printing and formatting so the command methods can look like this:
@CommandLine.Command
public String sayGoodbye()
{
return printValue("GoodBye");
}
You already found the CommandLine.getParseResult
method; perhaps a helper method could assist with the formatting there as well.
There is a third option, but it is unfortunately quite a bit more complex: you can create a custom IExecutionStrategy
that prints the result of each command after executing it. It involves copying a lot of code from the picocli internals and it’s not really a realistic solution; I just mention it for completeness.
// extend RunLast to handle requests for help/version and exit code stuff
class PrintingExecutionStrategy extends CommandLine.RunLast {
@Override
protected List<Object> handle(ParseResult parseResult) throws ExecutionException {
// Simplified: executes only the last subcommand (so no repeating subcommands).
// Look at RunLast.executeUserObjectOfLastSubcommandWithSameParent if you need repeating subcommands.
List<CommandLine> parsedCommands = parseResult.asCommandLineList();
CommandLine last = parsedCommands.get(parsedCommands.size() - 1);
return execute(last, new ArrayList<Object>());
}
// copied from CommandLine.executeUserObject,
// modified to print the execution result
private List<Object> execute(CommandLine cmd, List<Object> executionResultList) throws Exception {
Object command = parsed.getCommand();
if (command instanceof Runnable) {
try {
((Runnable) command).run();
parsed.setExecutionResult(null); // 4.0
executionResultList.add(null); // for compatibility with picocli 2.x
return executionResultList;
} catch (ParameterException ex) {
throw ex;
} catch (ExecutionException ex) {
throw ex;
} catch (Exception ex) {
throw new ExecutionException(parsed, "Error while running command (" + command + "): " + ex, ex);
}
} else if (command instanceof Callable) {
try {
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked") Callable<Object> callable = (Callable<Object>) command;
Object executionResult = callable.call();
System.out.println(executionResult); <-------- print result
parsed.setExecutionResult(executionResult);
executionResultList.add(executionResult);
return executionResultList;
} catch (ParameterException ex) {
throw ex;
} catch (ExecutionException ex) {
throw ex;
} catch (Exception ex) {
throw new ExecutionException(parsed, "Error while calling command (" + command + "): " + ex, ex);
}
} else if (command instanceof Method) {
try {
Method method = (Method) command;
Object[] parsedArgs = parsed.getCommandSpec().argValues();
Object executionResult;
if (Modifier.isStatic(method.getModifiers())) {
executionResult = method.invoke(null, parsedArgs); // invoke static method
} else if (parsed.getCommandSpec().parent() != null) {
executionResult = method.invoke(parsed.getCommandSpec().parent().userObject(), parsedArgs);
} else {
executionResult = method.invoke(parsed.factory.create(method.getDeclaringClass()), parsedArgs);
}
System.out.println(executionResult); <-------- print result
parsed.setExecutionResult(executionResult);
executionResultList.add(executionResult);
return executionResultList;
} catch (InvocationTargetException ex) {
Throwable t = ex.getTargetException();
if (t instanceof ParameterException) {
throw (ParameterException) t;
} else if (t instanceof ExecutionException) {
throw (ExecutionException) t;
} else {
throw new ExecutionException(parsed, "Error while calling command (" + command + "): " + t, t);
}
} catch (Exception ex) {
throw new ExecutionException(parsed, "Unhandled error while calling command (" + command + "): " + ex, ex);
}
}
throw new ExecutionException(parsed, "Parsed command (" + command + ") is not a Method, Runnable or Callable");
}
}
Use it like this:
public static void main(String... args) {
new CommandLine(new Foo())
.setExecutionStrategy(new PrintingExecutionStrategy())
.execute(args);
}
I wouldn’t recommend the above.
Update: I thought of another, fourth, option (actually a variation of your 2nd solution). You can specify a custom IExecutionExceptionHandler
that doesn’t print the stacktrace, but instead stores the exception so you can print the stacktrace after printing the command results. Something like this:
class MyHandler extends IExecutionExceptionHandler() {
Exception exception;
public int handleExecutionException(Exception ex,
CommandLine commandLine,
ParseResult parseResult) {
//ex.printStackTrace(); // no stack trace
exception = ex;
}
}
Use it like this:
public static void main(String... args) {
MyHandler handler = new MyHandler();
CommandLine cmd = new CommandLine(new Foo())
.setExecutionExceptionHandler(handler);
cmd.execute(args);
ParseResult parseResult = cmd.getParseResult();
for( ParseResult pr : parseResult.subcommands() )
{
System.out.println( pr.commandSpec().commandLine()
.getExecutionResult()
.toString() );
}
if (handler.exception != null) {
handler.exception.printStackTrace();
}
}